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Morgan,
You sure do good research! Another great post, as usual. Unfortunately, however, I don't think Robin Dayne's thread has really disappeared - yet. It's still located at:
Subject 28204
However, I don't think she really knows how to use it, and I don't think anyone else really cares. The thread is, for all practical purposes, dead. Notice how she only writes to herself, and only posts more of her tired old b.s., stuff everyone already knows anyway. She fails to respond to any questions posed to her by other members, including myself, of course. Her agenda is clear. She's only there to promote her scam. I think she probably dreams of becoming the next Wade Cook. Not a chance.
Thanks for the interesting N.Y. Times link you provided. Good reading for all. Here's a brief excerpt:
"State securities regulators added the scams Monday to their annual list of the ''top ten'' investment frauds. Also added were high-priced seminars in ''day trading,'' in which inexperienced investors are convinced they can get rich quick by rapid-fire buying of selling of stocks.
''Today we have an ideal climate for fraud,'' said Peter Hildreth, president of the North American Securities Administrators Association, and director of securities regulation in New Hampshire. ''Millions of new investors, many of whom expect unrealistically high returns, are looking for places to put their money. At the same time we're living through an Internet-driven technology revolution that is a boon to investors and con artists alike.''
Like I said before, the higher the price of a seminar, the more suspicious one needs to be about it.
Bill |
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